Perhaps the most difficult thing to do when dealing with current events is to establish the link between economics and politics. Thus the corporate press never, ever present an event, the invasion of Iraq for example as having any connection with economics, indeed any attempt to do so is ridiculed (eg it’s not all about oil). The modus operandi is, keep it simple stupid, it’s good versus evil, don’t confuse the public’s mind with the complexities of real life for once you do so, an awful lot of explaining has to be done as to why countries act the way they do, none of which is in accord with the way events are portrayed in the MSM.

In my last piece, ‘Leaving the scene of the crime’, I quoted from a piece in the Independent on the ‘Suez Crisis’ by Mary Dejevsky which is a perfect example of this process in action whereby Empire whether past, present or intended is reduced to the level of psychology and personalities. Defeat is a “national humiliation”. Yes, there is a passing reference to economics but it is never presented as the root cause of the Anglo-French-Israeli invasion of Eygpt. Instead it’s couched in the context of the Cold War and Nasser’s desire to ‘take control of the Suez Canal’. Why he would want to do this is not explained except in the context of one person’s desire for power or a desire to humiliate ‘Great Britain.’ Thus Dejevesky tells us

“The Suez crisis began when the young and forceful President of Eygpt, Gamal Abdul Nasser, seized control of the Suez Canal after the US and Britain refused to help fund the Aswan Dam.”

Note that Nasser did it according to Dejevsky largely because Nasser
was “young and forceful” nor does Dejevsky explain why the US and
Britain refused to fund the building of the Aswan Dam, fundamental
economic reasons disappear beneath the psychology of Nasser, who was
“young and forceful” no doubt because he had too much testosterone
circulating in his overheated, Arab veins.

Thus
the causes of wars are invariably presented to us because there are
nasty, evil individuals in charge who want to take over the world or
destroy ‘civilisation’ or, as in the case of Nasser, for some kind of
adolescent urge to prove himself a ‘real man’. Once reduced to such
simplistic causes it becomes all the easier to bury the deeper and more
fundamental reasons why countries go to war. They may exist, it is
after all, even for a duplicitous writer like Dejevesky all but
impossible to ignore them, but we are led to believe that such reasons
are subordinate.

Take for example North Korea
where we are told that Kim Sung II, the president of the DPRK wants
nuclear weapons because he wants to ‘take over’ South Korea and destroy
the ‘West’. He wants to do this basically because he’s a nutcase, a
psychopath or again perhaps he has too much testosterone circulating in
his hot, Asian veins?

Whatever the reason be
assured that economics has nothing to do with the ‘Korean nuclear
crisis’. But dig a little deeper and we get a very different picture of
events.

“At the six-party
talks on September 19, 2005, a statement of principles on nuclear
disarmament was signed between the U.S. and the Democratic People’s
Republic of Korea [DPRK] … Although the U.S. was required under the
agreement to begin normalizing relations with North Korea, on literally
the very next day it announced the imposition of sanctions on North
Korean accounts held in the Macao-based Banco Delta Asia, ostensibly
because they were being used to circulate counterfeit currency.”[1]

Over a year later and the US has yet to provide any evidence to back up its accusation.

“The North Koreans said they would respond to evidence of
counterfeiting by arresting those who were involved and seizing their
equipment. “Both sides can have a dialogue at the consultative body
through which they can build trust. It would have a very positive
impact on addressing the nuclear issue on the Korean peninsula,” Ri
said. The delegation also suggested that a North Korean settlement
account be opened at a U.S. financial institution and placed under U.S.
supervision, so as to allay suspicions … Not surprisingly, the North
Korean offers were rejected.”[2]

So why did the US invent the bogus story of North Korean counterfeiting?

“The measures taken against Banco Delta Asia deprived North Korea of a
major access point to foreign exchange, and served also as a mechanism
for magnifying the effect of sanctions. By blacklisting Banco Delta
Asia, the U.S. caused other financial institutions to curtail dealings
with the bank, until it was forced to sever relations with North Korea.
The campaign soon took on global significance. The U.S. Treasury
Department sent warning letters to banks around the world, resulting in
a worldwide wave of banks shutting down North Korean accounts. Fearing
U.S. retaliation, banks felt it prudent to close North Korean accounts
rather than risk being blacklisted and driven out of business. U.S.
Treasury Under Secretary Stuart Levey observed that sanctions and U.S.
threats had put “huge pressure” on the DPRK, leading to a “snowballing
avalanche effect.” U.S. actions were meant to undermine any prospect of
a peaceful settlement.”[3]

Clearly
‘regime change’ is the objective of US actions, for by depriving the
DPRK of access to foreign currency and thus the ability to trade,
further weakens the already weakened North Korean economy. Why subject
the Korean people to such deprivations when we are told that it is the
welfare of the Korean people that motivates the actions of the West?

So
what the hell is going on here? Why would the US sign an agreement that
reduces tensions, normalises relations that would lead to the removal
of any kind of ‘nuclear threat’ from the DPRK and then do its best to
sabotage the agreement? More to the point, why is this not
reported in the MSM? Why hide such important information from the
public especially when we are being told that North Korea is such an
alleged threat to peace?

Dare one suggest that
the MSM has some kind of hidden agenda here, that it doesn’t want us to
know the real reasons behind events and the actions of our political
leaders? How else does one explain why such important information is
missing from news coverage of North Korea?

Those
of us with a skeptical view of events as they are portrayed to us will
need no convincing but what of the great majority of the public who are
not aware that they are being misled and lied to?

Obviously
there are two realities coexisting here, the one presented to us in the
mass media and the other reality of real power being exerted for the
real reasons, not the least of which is economic. For as long as North
Korea, Cuba, Venezuela, indeed any country which pursues a course not
in accordance with US economic objectives, it will feel the wrath of
its power whether the leader is “young and forceful” or a “popularist
demagogue” or whatever derogatory put-down suits the situation.

To
suggest that the MSM behaves in this way is of course derided as the
ravings of ‘conspiracists’ or even worse that such a critique is itself
the expression of a hidden agenda all its own. Yet how else can one
explain the complete absence of any reference to the real actions of
the US in its dealings with the DPRK than by the fact that the MSM has
a not-so-hidden agenda in keeping critical facts from the public
especially if they have a direct bearing on the management of
engineered crises such as the North Korean ‘nuclear threat”. It
wouldn’t do to expose the under-handed actions of the US when the media
line consists of endless stories about the DPRK’s ‘nuclear ambitions’
and its deranged leader.

And note how ‘crises’
come and go at least as presented in the corporate press. One day the
world is on the brink of nuclear conflagration and the next not a word
is to be found about North Korea’s nuclear ‘ambitions’. But taken as a
continuum of news coverage events consist largely of one ‘crisis’ after
another. Never of course of the West’s creation, it’s always those
nasty Asians, double-dealing Arabs, or hot-blooded Latinos etc. In fact
it’s an endless liturgy of crises and threats to ‘our’ way of life but
these are always ‘threats’ that exist in splendid isolation from
reality.

‘We’ are always the victim of a rogue’s
gallery of various and sundry nutters and over-sexed psychopaths who
come and go according to criteria dictated by the actions and
objectives of our governments. But without the active complicity of the
corporate media such ‘threats’ would be impossible to sell, thus the
seeming innocuous words of the likes of Mary Dejevsky, which purport to
be no more than her ‘musings’ about her then youthful impressions of
the ‘Suez Crisis’ (”Mine is the generation that grew up in the shadow
of Suez”) take on a far more ominous role for they reinforce an
imperial view of the world, of an ‘us versus them’ world, where ‘we’
are the victims, even if, as Dejevsky suggests, it’s merely no more
than a fatal blow to our once imperial egos.

But
this is how the deception is carried off and what makes such ‘musings’
so dangerous for they mask the underlying reality of power and economic
interests (eg ownership of the Suez Canal, which although running
through Egypt right across Egyptian land, was “seized” by Nasser in
Dejevsky’s topsy-turvy universe, where ownership is the exclusive right
of those with the power to enforce it).

Defy that
power and be assured you will get what you deserve, first demonised by
the MSM, then isolated by the mythical ‘international community’
(newsspeak for the US and the major European economic powers) followed
by an unhealthy dose of high explosives just in case you didn’t get the
message.